UN Syria envoy hails small gains in latest peace talks
The UN Syria envoy closed the latest round of sputtering peace talks on Friday insisting "incremental progress" was made, driving hope that face-to-face negotiations between rebels and the Damascus regime may soon be possible.
United Nations mediator Staffan de Mistura told reporters in Geneva that he planned to convene an eighth round of talks in early September and had instructed all sides, including the regime, to be ready to tackle the flashpoint issue of political transition.
The main opposition High Negotiations Committee says political transition means the departure of President Bashar al-Assad.
Assad's delegation, led by Syria's UN ambassador Bashar al-Jaafari, has declared the president's fate off limits.
De Mistura said he has not seen any indication that the regime is willing to talk about forming a new government in Syria but voiced hope that international pressure could move the needle.
Steps forward?
"We have made, as we were expecting and hoping, incremental progress. No breakthrough, no breakdown, no one walking out," de Mistura said after briefing the UN Security Council by video on the seventh round of talks.
Aside from the HNC, the UN envoy has been meeting with two other opposition groups – known as the Moscow and Cairo platforms – seen as more favourable to Assad.
De Mistura wants to merge the three opposition camps before pushing for direct talks between the government and a unified opposition delegation.
The opposition groups have drawn closer together, built new levels of "trust" and have scheduled to meet again later this month, de Mistura said.
That may make it possible for "all sides to be able to sit in the same room and start talking about substance," he added, explaining that he would push for direct regime-opposition talks in September.
Familiar soundbites
The regime and HNC traded familiar soundbites before leaving the Swiss city on Friday.
Jaafari said his side focused on "counter-terrorism" as well as "technical, legal and constitutional discussions" during this round.
The HNC argues that the regime stresses the terrorism issue to distract from Assad's future, the massive hurdle in the way of any prospective deal.
The Geneva talks focus on four so-called "baskets" – a new constitution, governance, elections and fighting terrorism.
The first three were set out by the Security Council, while terrorism was added at the regime's insistence.
The HNC again blasted the regime for stalling the process.
"Let's speak frankly, the Syrian regime, until this moment, is refusing any engagements and discussion or negotiation," the HNC's delegation chief, Nasr al-Hariri, told reporters.